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Everything posted by Cody Christie
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Fresh off what has arguably been the most successful World Baseball Classic to date, Rob Manfred is already looking at ways to adjust the event’s future. That instinct is understandable given the tournament’s rapid growth, but it also raises a familiar question. Why fix something that is clearly working? Appearing on The Dan Patrick Show to discuss the beginning of the 2026 MLB season, Manfred was asked whether the WBC could become a more frequent event. His answer made it clear that Major League Baseball is seriously considering changes to the tournament’s cadence. “We’re gonna have a meeting on the WBC, which we always do after it is completed. I think the event was so successful this time that we need to talk about frequency, regularity of schedule,” Manfred said. “It’s one thing to not to do it every year, our problem because of COVID, labor negotiations, whatever, you can’t even say it’s every four years. It hasn’t been. Given how popular it is, we need to get into a regular rotation.” The desire for consistency is not unreasonable. Since its debut in 2006, the World Baseball Classic has never truly settled into a rhythm. It began on a three-year cycle before shifting to four years, only to see that plan disrupted by a six-year gap following 2017 due to the pandemic. When the tournament finally returned in 2023, it delivered one of the most iconic moments with a Japan versus the United States championship for the ages. That game alone proved the event had evolved far beyond exhibition status. By the time the 2026 tournament wrapped up, the momentum had only grown. Television ratings climbed, global interest surged, and the overall product felt bigger than ever. Fans were invested, players were all in, and the atmosphere carried a level of intensity that even October baseball sometimes struggles to match. That is exactly why Major League Baseball should proceed with caution. Manfred is correct in identifying the need for a clear and predictable schedule. A defined rotation benefits fans trying to plan around the event and gives broadcast partners something concrete to build around in future media negotiations. It is difficult to maximize value when networks are unsure when the next tournament will take place. However, consistency does not have to mean increased frequency. There has already been discussion of experimenting with more dramatic changes, including moving the WBC to the middle of the MLB season. That concept feels misguided. Players already balance a demanding 162-game schedule, and the mid-summer break serves a purpose. Asking them to replace rest with high-intensity international competition risks diminishing participation, which is the lifeblood of the tournament. Even a small adjustment, such as shifting to a two-year cycle, could have unintended consequences. Part of what makes the World Baseball Classic special is its rarity. When players know the opportunity only comes around every few years, the urgency is real. National pride carries more weight. The stakes feel higher. If the event becomes more frequent, that edge could soften. The World Baseball Classic absolutely needs structure. The past two decades have proven that a floating timeline creates confusion and limits its long-term growth. But structure does not require reinvention. Baseball finally has something that captures global attention in a meaningful way. The solution is not to tinker with its foundation, but to solidify it. View full rumor
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Fresh off what has arguably been the most successful World Baseball Classic to date, Rob Manfred is already looking at ways to adjust the event’s future. That instinct is understandable given the tournament’s rapid growth, but it also raises a familiar question. Why fix something that is clearly working? Appearing on The Dan Patrick Show to discuss the beginning of the 2026 MLB season, Manfred was asked whether the WBC could become a more frequent event. His answer made it clear that Major League Baseball is seriously considering changes to the tournament’s cadence. “We’re gonna have a meeting on the WBC, which we always do after it is completed. I think the event was so successful this time that we need to talk about frequency, regularity of schedule,” Manfred said. “It’s one thing to not to do it every year, our problem because of COVID, labor negotiations, whatever, you can’t even say it’s every four years. It hasn’t been. Given how popular it is, we need to get into a regular rotation.” The desire for consistency is not unreasonable. Since its debut in 2006, the World Baseball Classic has never truly settled into a rhythm. It began on a three-year cycle before shifting to four years, only to see that plan disrupted by a six-year gap following 2017 due to the pandemic. When the tournament finally returned in 2023, it delivered one of the most iconic moments with a Japan versus the United States championship for the ages. That game alone proved the event had evolved far beyond exhibition status. By the time the 2026 tournament wrapped up, the momentum had only grown. Television ratings climbed, global interest surged, and the overall product felt bigger than ever. Fans were invested, players were all in, and the atmosphere carried a level of intensity that even October baseball sometimes struggles to match. That is exactly why Major League Baseball should proceed with caution. Manfred is correct in identifying the need for a clear and predictable schedule. A defined rotation benefits fans trying to plan around the event and gives broadcast partners something concrete to build around in future media negotiations. It is difficult to maximize value when networks are unsure when the next tournament will take place. However, consistency does not have to mean increased frequency. There has already been discussion of experimenting with more dramatic changes, including moving the WBC to the middle of the MLB season. That concept feels misguided. Players already balance a demanding 162-game schedule, and the mid-summer break serves a purpose. Asking them to replace rest with high-intensity international competition risks diminishing participation, which is the lifeblood of the tournament. Even a small adjustment, such as shifting to a two-year cycle, could have unintended consequences. Part of what makes the World Baseball Classic special is its rarity. When players know the opportunity only comes around every few years, the urgency is real. National pride carries more weight. The stakes feel higher. If the event becomes more frequent, that edge could soften. The World Baseball Classic absolutely needs structure. The past two decades have proven that a floating timeline creates confusion and limits its long-term growth. But structure does not require reinvention. Baseball finally has something that captures global attention in a meaningful way. The solution is not to tinker with its foundation, but to solidify it.
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Minnesota Twins Prospect Retrospective: Andrew Morris
Cody Christie posted an article in Minor Leagues
Andrew Morris has never taken the conventional road, and that is part of what makes his climb through the Minnesota Twins system so compelling. Now, that journey is intersecting with opportunity, as the Twins have turned to Morris to help fill the void left by the injured Cody Laweryson. A fourth-round pick in the 2022 Draft, Morris has steadily worked his way from relative obscurity into a legitimate big league option, even if the journey has come with a few bumps along the way. Morris started his college career at Division II Colorado Mesa, spending three years in the starting rotation before transferring to Texas Tech. Once there, he took on a prominent role as the Red Raiders' Friday night starter, putting himself firmly on the draft radar. In 88 1/3 innings, he posted a 4.58 ERA with a 1.22 WHIP and 9.3 K/0. The Twins saw enough to make him a fourth-round selection, and Morris quickly began validating that decision. His early professional seasons showed steady growth, but it was his 2024 campaign that truly put him on the map. Breakout in 2024 After showing moderate success in his first full professional season, Morris broke through in a big way during 2024. He opened the year at High-A and climbed all the way to Triple-A by the end of the season. Across three levels, he posted a 2.37 ERA and finished with an effective seven-start stint at Triple-A (3.48 ERA with a 1.13 WHIP) . Overall, he posted a 24.5 K% with a 5.9 BB% while holding batters to a .219 BA. That performance positioned him as one of the more intriguing pitching depth options in the organization and put him on the doorstep of a big-league debut. A Setback and Response in 2025 The momentum from 2024 did not carry over cleanly into 2025. Morris opened the season with St. Paul and initially looked solid, but things began to unravel in late May as he started getting hit harder. In June, he landed on the injured list with a forearm strain, an injury that always raises concern for pitchers. He missed roughly six weeks, halting what had already become a challenging season. To his credit, Morris returned in mid-August and finished strong. Down the stretch, he posted a 3.45 ERA with a 29-to-4 strikeout to walk ratio in 31 1/3 innings. It was a reminder of his ability to adapt and compete, even in the face of adversity. A Deep Pitch Mix Morris does not rely on overpowering hitters, even though he has the velocity to suggest he could. His four-seam fastball sat in the 95 to 96 mph range last year and touched 99 mph, featuring decent vertical break. It generated a high chase rate of 40 percent, though it was also hit harder than expected. What sets Morris apart is the depth of his arsenal. He incorporates a two-seamer more frequently against right-handed hitters and added a 90-mph cutter to give hitters a different look. A late addition of a sweeper has helped increase his swing-and-miss ability, while he continues to mix in a mid-70s curveball and an upper-80s changeup. With an essentially kitchen-sink approach, Morris leans on sequencing and pitchability. He throws strikes consistently, though at times it's more control than true command, which leads to contact. Projection and Role At 6 feet, Morris does not offer much remaining projection physically, but his polish gives him a realistic path forward. He pounds the strike zone with a six-pitch mix, limits home runs, and generates weak contact more than empty swings. That profile points toward an innings eater with some mid-rotation upside, though many evaluators see a back-end starter as the most likely outcome. There is also a case to be made for a multi-inning relief role, especially given how effectively he can mix pitches in shorter bursts. Even with the step backward last season, his strong finish reinforced that he remains a legitimate pitching prospect. He’s ready to contribute to the Twins in 2026, whether that comes as rotation depth or in a flexible pitching role. For an organization that continues to rely on internal arms, Morris represents a steady and versatile option who has earned the opportunity to prove himself at the highest level. What stands out about Morris? Can he be successful in a relief role? Leave a comment and start the discussion. -
Image courtesy of Rob Thompson, St. Paul Saints Andrew Morris has never taken the conventional road, and that is part of what makes his climb through the Minnesota Twins system so compelling. Now, that journey is intersecting with opportunity, as the Twins have turned to Morris to help fill the void left by the injured Cody Laweryson. A fourth-round pick in the 2022 Draft, Morris has steadily worked his way from relative obscurity into a legitimate big league option, even if the journey has come with a few bumps along the way. Morris started his college career at Division II Colorado Mesa, spending three years in the starting rotation before transferring to Texas Tech. Once there, he took on a prominent role as the Red Raiders' Friday night starter, putting himself firmly on the draft radar. In 88 1/3 innings, he posted a 4.58 ERA with a 1.22 WHIP and 9.3 K/0. The Twins saw enough to make him a fourth-round selection, and Morris quickly began validating that decision. His early professional seasons showed steady growth, but it was his 2024 campaign that truly put him on the map. Breakout in 2024 After showing moderate success in his first full professional season, Morris broke through in a big way during 2024. He opened the year at High-A and climbed all the way to Triple-A by the end of the season. Across three levels, he posted a 2.37 ERA and finished with an effective seven-start stint at Triple-A (3.48 ERA with a 1.13 WHIP) . Overall, he posted a 24.5 K% with a 5.9 BB% while holding batters to a .219 BA. That performance positioned him as one of the more intriguing pitching depth options in the organization and put him on the doorstep of a big league debut. A Setback and Response in 2025 The momentum from 2024 did not carry over cleanly into 2025. Morris opened the season with St. Paul and initially looked solid, but things began to unravel in late May as he started getting hit harder. In June, he landed on the injured list with a forearm strain, an injury that always raises concern for pitchers. He missed roughly six weeks, halting what had already become a challenging season. To his credit, Morris returned in mid-August and finished strong. Down the stretch, he posted a 3.45 ERA with a 29-to-4 strikeout to walk ratio in 31 1/3 innings. It was a reminder of his ability to adapt and compete, even in the face of adversity. A Deep Pitch Mix Morris does not rely on overpowering hitters, even though he has the velocity to suggest he could. His four-seam fastball sat in the 95 to 96 mph range last year and touched 99 mph, featuring decent vertical break. It generated a high chase rate of 40 percent, though it was also hit harder than expected. What sets Morris apart is the depth of his arsenal. He incorporates a two-seamer more frequently against right-handed hitters and added a 90 mph cutter to give hitters a different look. A late addition of a sweeper has helped increase his swing-and-miss ability, while he continues to mix in a mid-70s curveball and an upper-80s changeup. With an essentially kitchen-sink approach, Morris leans on sequencing and pitchability. He throws strikes consistently, though at times it's more control than true command, which leads to contact. Projection and Role At 6 foot, Morris does not offer much remaining projection physically, but his polish gives him a realistic path forward. He pounds the strike zone with a six-pitch mix, limits home runs, and generates weak contact more than empty swings. That profile points toward an innings eater with some mid-rotation upside, though many evaluators see a back-end starter as the most likely outcome. There is also a case to be made for a multi-inning relief role, especially given how effectively he can mix pitches in shorter bursts. Even with the step backward last season, his strong finish reinforced that he remains a legitimate pitching prospect. He’s ready to contribute to the Twins in 2026, whether that comes as rotation depth or in a flexible pitching role. For an organization that continues to rely on internal arms, Morris represents a steady and versatile option who has earned the opportunity to prove himself at the highest level. What stands out about Morris? Can he be successful in a relief role? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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The automated ball strike system was always going to change the way games are managed, but it is quickly becoming clear that it is also changing how catchers are evaluated. For the Minnesota Twins, few players have embraced that shift more than Ryan Jeffers. What started as a rules experiment has become a legitimate skill separator, and Jeffers is leaning into it, boosting both his value and his framing profile. Twins Lean Into the Challenge Game From the moment the ABS challenge system was introduced in Spring Training, the Twins treated it like something to be optimized rather than tolerated. That mindset has carried into the regular season. As they were in Spring Training, the Twins have been one of baseball’s most aggressive teams with ABS challenges. And overall, it has worked out well for them. It was particularly notable in Tuesday night’s win against the Tigers, when Ryan Jeffers had two successful challenges from behind the plate to end innings. Entering Thursday’s game, the Twins had the most hitter challenges, the most successful hitter challenges, the second most catcher challenges, and the second most successful catcher challenges in MLB. Jeffers has been at the center of that aggression. Entering play on Thursday, among catchers, Jeffers has the most challenges at 15. He is also tied with Logan O’Hoppe for the league lead with 10 challenges won as a catcher. He is dominating in strikeouts gained from challenges with eight. No other catcher has more than three. “Being able to have the ability to trust myself to challenge it, but then to be able to challenge that in general,” said Jeffers, “it’s a big wrinkle in the game now that I think some people are going to be really good at and some people are not going to be good at. It’s going to be a skill that’s going to be tracked and evaluated like any other skill is.” A Return to What Once Worked What makes this even more interesting is how it intersects with Jeffers’ framing history. Early in his career, Jeffers was viewed as a strong framing catcher. He presented the ball well, worked the edges of the zone, and consistently graded out as a positive behind the plate. From 2021-22, he combined for 10 runs from his framing alone. That skillset was part of what made him such an intriguing long-term option for the Twins. Then came adjustments. In an effort to improve other elements of his defensive game, Twins catching coaches altered Jeffers’ stance behind the plate. Most notably, he began working with a more exaggerated lower-half setup, often keeping a leg extended more regularly. The goal was to improve mobility and throwing, but it came with a trade-off. His framing numbers dipped. Last season, Jeffers ranked in the 44th percentile for framing at minus one run. From 2023-24, he combined to be worth -12 runs from framing. The visual presentation was not as clean, and the subtle movements that once helped him steal strikes were not showing up the same way. ABS Is Refocusing the Strike Zone This is where ABS has quietly helped reshape things. With the ability to challenge pitches, the emphasis shifts from selling borderline strikes to knowing the zone with precision. Catchers are no longer just performers behind the plate. They are decision makers with immediate consequences. For Jeffers, that has meant a renewed focus on the strike zone itself. Instead of relying purely on presentation, he is pairing that with conviction. If he believes a pitch clipped the zone, he has the confidence and now the mechanism to act on it. That mindset appears to be bleeding back into his framing. Entering this season, Jeffers has climbed to zero framing runs and sits in the 62nd percentile. It is not a massive jump on paper, but it is a meaningful one in context. The combination of improved results and elite challenge success suggests a catcher who is more in tune with the zone than he has been in recent years. ABS is not replacing framing. It is redefining how it matters. For Jeffers, the system has become more than a safety net. It is a tool that reinforces his instincts, sharpens his awareness, and, in the process, helps him rediscover a part of his game that once stood out. If this is what the early stages of ABS look like, the Twins may already have one of their most valuable practitioners behind the plate. What has stood out regarding Jeffers and ABS? Has his framing improved this year? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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There are growing pains that come with any new technology, and Major League Baseball’s Automated Ball Strike challenge system is no exception. On Thursday, the Minnesota Twins found themselves in the middle of one of the most talked-about moments yet in the early days of ABS, a call so close that it is now fueling debate across the sport about what the strike zone should actually be. In the bottom of the second inning, Royce Lewis stepped to the plate against Jack Flaherty with a runner on first base. The count moved to 3-1, and Flaherty delivered an 91.3 mph fastball that was ruled a ball by the home plate umpire. Lewis began his routine jog to first base, shedding his gear as if the walk was already secured. Detroit catcher Jake Rogers tapped his helmet, signaling for a review. Within seconds, the Hawk Eye system took over and delivered its verdict. The call was overturned. Strike two. Not just a strike, but the closest confirmed strike yet under the system, according to Codify Baseball. Hawk Eye showed that the tiniest sliver of the baseball clipped the strike zone, enough to flip the call and send Lewis back into the box. Instead of standing on first base, Lewis was suddenly in a 3-2 count, and Flaherty finished the at-bat with another fastball that Lewis swung through for strike three. It is exactly the type of moment ABS was designed to handle, but it is also the type of moment that exposes how different a rulebook strike zone can feel compared to the one players and fans have grown used to seeing. The debate picked up quickly. MLB analyst Ryan M. Spaeder voiced frustration with how the system currently interprets the zone. He suggested a 50-50 rule, where at least half the baseball must cross into the strike zone to be called a strike. His argument centered on the idea that the current system effectively expands the zone beyond its traditional 17-inch width. When accounting for the baseball's full diameter, Spaeder argued, the zone can be closer to 22.8 inches wide. That interpretation has raised eyebrows, especially for hitters who now must account for pitches that barely graze the edge rather than clearly enter the zone. From a hitter’s perspective, the difference between a ball and a strike has never been thinner, literally. Still, not everyone sees a problem. There is a strong contingent across the league that believes this is exactly what ABS is meant to accomplish. For pitchers, a pitch that clips the zone is a perfect pitch, and the system rewards that precision without bias or inconsistency. In a sport that has long struggled with inconsistent strike zones from umpire to umpire, ABS offers a level of consistency previously unattainable. Royals reliever Matt Strahm even pushed back on Spaeder’s idea publicly, noting that if baseball is going to start redefining what counts as a strike based on partial entry, then the same logic would need to apply elsewhere. He suggests that the foul line/pole shouldn’t be fair then. For the Twins, the moment was more frustrating than philosophical. What looked like a routine walk turned into a strikeout, and a potential scoring opportunity disappeared just as quickly as it appeared. It is the kind of swing that can change an inning, or even a game, and it underscores how impactful the challenge system can be in high-leverage spots. At the same time, it is hard to argue that the system got the call wrong. By definition, it got it exactly right. That is where the tension lies as baseball continues to adapt. The ABS system is doing what it was designed to do, but it is also forcing players, analysts, and fans to reconsider what they expect the strike zone to look like. The human element has not disappeared, but it is now being checked by a level of precision that leaves little room for interpretation. Moments like this one involving Lewis are likely to keep popping up as the season unfolds. Each will add another layer to the conversation about fairness and consistency. For now, the early returns suggest that while there may be flaws to iron out, the overall reception to ABS has been positive. Players are adjusting, fans are learning, and the league is gathering valuable feedback in real time. The strike zone may not look the way it used to, but it has never been more exact. View full rumor
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There are growing pains that come with any new technology, and Major League Baseball’s Automated Ball Strike challenge system is no exception. On Thursday, the Minnesota Twins found themselves in the middle of one of the most talked-about moments yet in the early days of ABS, a call so close that it is now fueling debate across the sport about what the strike zone should actually be. In the bottom of the second inning, Royce Lewis stepped to the plate against Jack Flaherty with a runner on first base. The count moved to 3-1, and Flaherty delivered an 91.3 mph fastball that was ruled a ball by the home plate umpire. Lewis began his routine jog to first base, shedding his gear as if the walk was already secured. Detroit catcher Jake Rogers tapped his helmet, signaling for a review. Within seconds, the Hawk Eye system took over and delivered its verdict. The call was overturned. Strike two. Not just a strike, but the closest confirmed strike yet under the system, according to Codify Baseball. Hawk Eye showed that the tiniest sliver of the baseball clipped the strike zone, enough to flip the call and send Lewis back into the box. Instead of standing on first base, Lewis was suddenly in a 3-2 count, and Flaherty finished the at-bat with another fastball that Lewis swung through for strike three. It is exactly the type of moment ABS was designed to handle, but it is also the type of moment that exposes how different a rulebook strike zone can feel compared to the one players and fans have grown used to seeing. The debate picked up quickly. MLB analyst Ryan M. Spaeder voiced frustration with how the system currently interprets the zone. He suggested a 50-50 rule, where at least half the baseball must cross into the strike zone to be called a strike. His argument centered on the idea that the current system effectively expands the zone beyond its traditional 17-inch width. When accounting for the baseball's full diameter, Spaeder argued, the zone can be closer to 22.8 inches wide. That interpretation has raised eyebrows, especially for hitters who now must account for pitches that barely graze the edge rather than clearly enter the zone. From a hitter’s perspective, the difference between a ball and a strike has never been thinner, literally. Still, not everyone sees a problem. There is a strong contingent across the league that believes this is exactly what ABS is meant to accomplish. For pitchers, a pitch that clips the zone is a perfect pitch, and the system rewards that precision without bias or inconsistency. In a sport that has long struggled with inconsistent strike zones from umpire to umpire, ABS offers a level of consistency previously unattainable. Royals reliever Matt Strahm even pushed back on Spaeder’s idea publicly, noting that if baseball is going to start redefining what counts as a strike based on partial entry, then the same logic would need to apply elsewhere. He suggests that the foul line/pole shouldn’t be fair then. For the Twins, the moment was more frustrating than philosophical. What looked like a routine walk turned into a strikeout, and a potential scoring opportunity disappeared just as quickly as it appeared. It is the kind of swing that can change an inning, or even a game, and it underscores how impactful the challenge system can be in high-leverage spots. At the same time, it is hard to argue that the system got the call wrong. By definition, it got it exactly right. That is where the tension lies as baseball continues to adapt. The ABS system is doing what it was designed to do, but it is also forcing players, analysts, and fans to reconsider what they expect the strike zone to look like. The human element has not disappeared, but it is now being checked by a level of precision that leaves little room for interpretation. Moments like this one involving Lewis are likely to keep popping up as the season unfolds. Each will add another layer to the conversation about fairness and consistency. For now, the early returns suggest that while there may be flaws to iron out, the overall reception to ABS has been positive. Players are adjusting, fans are learning, and the league is gathering valuable feedback in real time. The strike zone may not look the way it used to, but it has never been more exact.
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Image courtesy of © Troy Taormina-Imagn Images One of the most shocking moves at last year’s trade deadline was sending Carlos Correa back to the Houston Astros in a deal that felt less like a pivot and more like a surrender. The Twins moved on from the highest-paid player in franchise history and paid another team $10 million per season to take him off their hands. That detail still lands like a punchline with no joke attached. Correa’s time in Minnesota never fit neatly into a single narrative. He was the steady hand that helped guide the franchise to its first playoff series win in two decades. He was also the player battling plantar fasciitis, looking like a different version of himself for stretches that mattered. At his peak, he was everything the Twins hoped for when they signed him, including a 5.3 rWAR season in 2022 and a dominant first half in 2024 that led to his only All-Star appearance with the organization. At his worst, he embodied the risk that comes with tying so much payroll to one player with durability questions. So now that the dust has settled, the question is unavoidable. Would the 2026 Twins actually be better if they had just kept him? Payroll Implications Moving on from Correa was supposed to create flexibility. Instead, it created an absence. The payroll dropped from $136 million in 2025 to $107 million in 2026, and those savings weren’t meaningfully reinvested. Keeping Correa at over $30 million annually would have forced a different kind of decision-making. If ownership still wanted to land near the current payroll level, subtraction would have been required elsewhere. Names like Pablo López, Joe Ryan, and Ryan Jeffers immediately come to mind as logical trade candidates. There is also a harsher reality. Trading López before his season-ending elbow injury might have been the most pragmatic move in that alternate timeline. It is the kind of cold calculation teams convince themselves is necessary when a superstar contract sits on the books. Instead, the Twins chose financial relief without roster optimization. The result is a leaner payroll that does not necessarily translate to a more competitive team. Roster Implications The ripple effects go beyond dollars. Without Correa’s contract, the Twins still operated like a team tightening its belt. Free agent additions such as Josh Bell and Victor Caratini came at a modest combined cost, but even those moves feel unlikely in a world where Correa remains on the roster. Instead of Caratini, the backup catching job likely falls to Alex Jackson. Instead of a rotating first base situation, Kody Clemens probably sees a heavier workload by necessity rather than design. The infield alignment becomes even more interesting. Keeping Correa at shortstop likely pushes Brooks Lee into a different role, potentially second base. That shift could open opportunities for Luke Keaschall to find regular at-bats in a corner outfield spot or even factor into the first base mix. In other words, the roster would not just look different. It would feel different. Less flexible in some ways, more top-heavy in others, and heavily dependent on Correa anchoring everything. Correa’s 2026 Performance Back in Houston, Correa has quietly begun writing a new chapter. The Astros shifted him to third base, a move that may prove to be as important as the trade itself. Through the first 11 games, he is hitting .262/.354/.381 with a .735 OPS and a 116 OPS+, while providing above-average defense at the hot corner. It is fair to wonder how much of that success is tied to context. Playing third base reduces the physical toll. Playing in a more familiar environment may also help. And perhaps most importantly, he is not dealing with early-season games in Minnesota weather while handling the demands of shortstop every day. Would he be producing the same numbers with the Twins right now? Maybe. But it feels just as likely that the conversation would once again center on health management and workload. Revisionist history rarely offers clean answers, and this case is no different. Keeping Correa would have given the Twins a higher ceiling on paper. A healthy version of Correa still raises the floor and the expectations of the entire roster. But that version comes with trade-offs. The pitching depth might look thinner. The lineup might feel less balanced. And the financial pressure would force difficult decisions that could reshape the roster in ways that are just as uncomfortable as the reality fans are watching now. In the end, the more frustrating truth is not that the Twins traded Correa. It is that they never fully capitalized on the freedom it offered. The question is not just whether they would be better with him. It is whether they did enough to justify living without him. Would the Twins have been better with Correa in 2026? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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Revisionist History: Would 2026 Twins Be Better with Carlos Correa?
Cody Christie posted an article in Twins
One of the most shocking moves at last year’s trade deadline was sending Carlos Correa back to the Houston Astros in a deal that felt less like a pivot and more like a surrender. The Twins moved on from the highest-paid player in franchise history and paid another team $10 million per season to take him off their hands. That detail still lands like a punchline with no joke attached. Correa’s time in Minnesota never fit neatly into a single narrative. He was the steady hand that helped guide the franchise to its first playoff series win in two decades. He was also the player battling plantar fasciitis, looking like a different version of himself for stretches that mattered. At his peak, he was everything the Twins hoped for when they signed him, including a 5.3 rWAR season in 2022 and a dominant first half in 2024 that led to his only All-Star appearance with the organization. At his worst, he embodied the risk that comes with tying so much payroll to one player with durability questions. So now that the dust has settled, the question is unavoidable. Would the 2026 Twins actually be better if they had just kept him? Payroll Implications Moving on from Correa was supposed to create flexibility. Instead, it created an absence. The payroll dropped from $136 million in 2025 to $107 million in 2026, and those savings weren’t meaningfully reinvested. Keeping Correa at over $30 million annually would have forced a different kind of decision-making. If ownership still wanted to land near the current payroll level, subtraction would have been required elsewhere. Names like Pablo López, Joe Ryan, and Ryan Jeffers immediately come to mind as logical trade candidates. There is also a harsher reality. Trading López before his season-ending elbow injury might have been the most pragmatic move in that alternate timeline. It is the kind of cold calculation teams convince themselves is necessary when a superstar contract sits on the books. Instead, the Twins chose financial relief without roster optimization. The result is a leaner payroll that does not necessarily translate to a more competitive team. Roster Implications The ripple effects go beyond dollars. Without Correa’s contract, the Twins still operated like a team tightening its belt. Free agent additions such as Josh Bell and Victor Caratini came at a modest combined cost, but even those moves feel unlikely in a world where Correa remains on the roster. Instead of Caratini, the backup catching job likely falls to Alex Jackson. Instead of a rotating first base situation, Kody Clemens probably sees a heavier workload by necessity rather than design. The infield alignment becomes even more interesting. Keeping Correa at shortstop likely pushes Brooks Lee into a different role, potentially second base. That shift could open opportunities for Luke Keaschall to find regular at-bats in a corner outfield spot or even factor into the first base mix. In other words, the roster would not just look different. It would feel different. Less flexible in some ways, more top-heavy in others, and heavily dependent on Correa anchoring everything. Correa’s 2026 Performance Back in Houston, Correa has quietly begun writing a new chapter. The Astros shifted him to third base, a move that may prove to be as important as the trade itself. Through the first 11 games, he is hitting .262/.354/.381 with a .735 OPS and a 116 OPS+, while providing above-average defense at the hot corner. It is fair to wonder how much of that success is tied to context. Playing third base reduces the physical toll. Playing in a more familiar environment may also help. And perhaps most importantly, he is not dealing with early-season games in Minnesota weather while handling the demands of shortstop every day. Would he be producing the same numbers with the Twins right now? Maybe. But it feels just as likely that the conversation would once again center on health management and workload. Revisionist history rarely offers clean answers, and this case is no different. Keeping Correa would have given the Twins a higher ceiling on paper. A healthy version of Correa still raises the floor and the expectations of the entire roster. But that version comes with trade-offs. The pitching depth might look thinner. The lineup might feel less balanced. And the financial pressure would force difficult decisions that could reshape the roster in ways that are just as uncomfortable as the reality fans are watching now. In the end, the more frustrating truth is not that the Twins traded Correa. It is that they never fully capitalized on the freedom it offered. The question is not just whether they would be better with him. It is whether they did enough to justify living without him. Would the Twins have been better with Correa in 2026? Leave a comment and start the discussion.- 18 comments
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Major League Baseball released its annual snapshot of Opening Day demographics this week, and while the numbers still point to a long road ahead, there are signs of meaningful progress. After dipping to a historic low in 2024, the percentage of African American players across the league has now risen in consecutive seasons, something the sport has not seen in roughly two decades. This year, African American players make up 6.5% of Opening Day rosters and injured lists, a noticeable increase from 5.7% the year prior and slightly above the 6.0% mark from two seasons ago. It is not a dramatic jump, but it is a step in the right direction for a league that has been searching for ways to rebuild its connection with Black communities. Development Programs Beginning to Show Results League officials have pointed to their investment in youth initiatives as a key factor behind the recent uptick. Programs such as MLB’s youth academies, the Dream Series, and the Breakthrough Series are starting to produce big-league talent. Of the 62 African American players on Opening Day rosters, 20 have participated in one of those pipelines. There is also a growing presence of high-end talent within that group. Nine of those players were former first-round picks, suggesting that the league is not only increasing participation but also developing impact players. The age distribution offers additional optimism. More than half of the current group is 27 or younger, while only a small handful are on the back side of their careers. That youth movement could help sustain growth if development systems continue to feed the pipeline. Twins Among League Leaders While the league-wide numbers are trending upward, the distribution across teams remains uneven. Six organizations began the season without a single African American player, highlighting how inconsistent representation still is from roster to roster. That is where the Minnesota Twins stand out. Minnesota enters the season with six African American players, tying them for the highest total in baseball alongside the Cincinnati Reds. For a smaller-market club, that level of representation is significant, especially when considering that the Twins alone account for a sizable portion of the league’s overall total. The group is not just filling out the roster either. It includes key contributors on both sides of the ball, including starting pitchers Taj Bradley and Simeon Woods Richardson, along with Byron Buxton and Josh Bell on the offensive side. Having that presence in prominent roles matters, both in terms of visibility and impact. At a time when more than a third of the league has one or zero African American players, the Twins are providing a blueprint for what a more inclusive roster can look like. Areas Where the Game Still Lags Despite the positive momentum, representation remains limited in some areas. Certain positions continue to lack diversity, particularly behind the plate and on the mound. There are only a small number of African American pitchers across the league, a striking reality given the size of pitching staffs. Catcher is another position where representation has been historically low, making each breakthrough at that spot even more meaningful. Additionally, more than a third of MLB teams have one or fewer African American players, including several high-profile organizations. That imbalance underscores the importance of continued investment in grassroots development and access to the sport. A Path Forward The broader picture shows a sport attempting to reverse a decades-long decline. International participation continues to grow, and MLB remains a global game, but rebuilding domestic diversity is clearly a priority. For the Twins, this moment reflects both organizational success and an opportunity. Their roster composition places them among the league leaders in representation, aligning with MLB’s broader efforts to create more inclusive pathways to the majors. Progress is happening, even if it is gradual. And for a franchise like Minnesota, being at the forefront of that movement is something worth recognizing as the game continues to evolve.
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- byron buxton
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Major League Baseball released its annual snapshot of Opening Day demographics this week, and while the numbers still point to a long road ahead, there are signs of meaningful progress. After dipping to a historic low in 2024, the percentage of African American players across the league has now risen in consecutive seasons, something the sport has not seen in roughly two decades. This year, African American players make up 6.5% of Opening Day rosters and injured lists, a noticeable increase from 5.7% the year prior and slightly above the 6.0% mark from two seasons ago. It is not a dramatic jump, but it is a step in the right direction for a league that has been searching for ways to rebuild its connection with Black communities. Development Programs Beginning to Show Results League officials have pointed to their investment in youth initiatives as a key factor behind the recent uptick. Programs such as MLB’s youth academies, the Dream Series, and the Breakthrough Series are starting to produce big-league talent. Of the 62 African American players on Opening Day rosters, 20 have participated in one of those pipelines. There is also a growing presence of high-end talent within that group. Nine of those players were former first-round picks, suggesting that the league is not only increasing participation but also developing impact players. The age distribution offers additional optimism. More than half of the current group is 27 or younger, while only a small handful are on the back side of their careers. That youth movement could help sustain growth if development systems continue to feed the pipeline. Twins Among League Leaders While the league-wide numbers are trending upward, the distribution across teams remains uneven. Six organizations began the season without a single African American player, highlighting how inconsistent representation still is from roster to roster. That is where the Minnesota Twins stand out. Minnesota enters the season with six African American players, tying them for the highest total in baseball alongside the Cincinnati Reds. For a smaller-market club, that level of representation is significant, especially when considering that the Twins alone account for a sizable portion of the league’s overall total. The group is not just filling out the roster either. It includes key contributors on both sides of the ball, including starting pitchers Taj Bradley and Simeon Woods Richardson, along with Byron Buxton and Josh Bell on the offensive side. Having that presence in prominent roles matters, both in terms of visibility and impact. At a time when more than a third of the league has one or zero African American players, the Twins are providing a blueprint for what a more inclusive roster can look like. Areas Where the Game Still Lags Despite the positive momentum, representation remains limited in some areas. Certain positions continue to lack diversity, particularly behind the plate and on the mound. There are only a small number of African American pitchers across the league, a striking reality given the size of pitching staffs. Catcher is another position where representation has been historically low, making each breakthrough at that spot even more meaningful. Additionally, more than a third of MLB teams have one or fewer African American players, including several high-profile organizations. That imbalance underscores the importance of continued investment in grassroots development and access to the sport. A Path Forward The broader picture shows a sport attempting to reverse a decades-long decline. International participation continues to grow, and MLB remains a global game, but rebuilding domestic diversity is clearly a priority. For the Twins, this moment reflects both organizational success and an opportunity. Their roster composition places them among the league leaders in representation, aligning with MLB’s broader efforts to create more inclusive pathways to the majors. Progress is happening, even if it is gradual. And for a franchise like Minnesota, being at the forefront of that movement is something worth recognizing as the game continues to evolve. View full rumor
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The Minnesota Twins have seemed to have a roster flaw in recent years, with a lack of impact right-handed bats. It is not an issue that has flown under the radar, either. Season after season, the lineup has leaned heavily to the left side, often prioritizing corner outfielders with power from that side of the plate. While that approach can work in a vacuum, it has created a predictable and exploitable weakness when the Twins face quality left-handed pitching. A Multi-Year Trend That Cannot Be Ignored This is not a small-sample-size problem or an early-season overreaction. The Twins have consistently struggled against left-handed pitchers over the last several seasons, and the numbers paint a clear picture. From 2022 through 2025, Minnesota’s production against lefties has been firmly middle of the pack at best and well below average at worst when compared across the league. Among 120 individual team seasons in that span, the Twins ranked near the bottom more often than not. The 2022 club posted a .701 OPS, ranking 77th out of 120. In 2023, there was a modest improvement to a .726 OPS, good for 53rd. The 2024 team took another small step forward with a .732 OPS, ranking 47th. However, that progress stalled in 2025 when the Twins slipped back to a .705 OPS, ranking 72nd. Now in 2026, the issue has become even more pronounced. Entering play on Thursday, Minnesota owns a .636 OPS against left-handed pitching, ranking 18th overall. That total has been greatly helped by positive performances this week against left-handed starters like Tarik Skubal and Framber Valdez. However, that number reinforces a pattern that has lingered far too long for a team on the fringes of contention in the AL Central. A Roster Built to Be Platooned The current roster construction only amplifies the concern. Minnesota is overloaded with left-handed hitters who are often best utilized in platoon roles rather than everyday options against all pitching. Players like Kody Clemens, Tristan Gray, Trevor Larnach, James Outman, and Matt Wallner all hit from the left side. Each brings something valuable, whether it is power or on-base ability, but asking that group collectively to handle tough left-handed starters is a difficult proposition. Internally, there is hope that right-handed hitters like Royce Lewis and Luke Keaschall can provide balance and thump in those matchups. Lewis has shown flashes of being a middle-of-the-order force when healthy, but posted a .689 OPS against lefties last season. Keaschall is an intriguing young bat with a career .547 OPS when facing southpaws. Still, counting on them to fully stabilize the lineup against lefties feels optimistic given health questions and limited track records. More importantly, the roster simply lacks enough right-handed depth to build a lineup tailored to attack a high-end southpaw. When a dominant left-handed starter takes the mound, Minnesota often has no choice but to run out a lineup that leans into its biggest weakness. Help Is Coming, But Not the Right Kind At first glance, help appears to be on the way. Four of the organization’s top five position player prospects opened the season at Triple-A, putting them one step away from the big leagues. However, their profiles do not necessarily solve this specific issue. Walker Jenkins and Emmanuel Rodriguez are both left-handed hitters with significant upside. The Twins can reasonably hope that each develops into a hitter capable of holding his own against left-handed pitching, avoiding strict platoon roles. That would mirror the paths taken by Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau, who became complete hitters despite batting left-handed. There are encouraging signs, but there are also clear gaps. Last season, Jenkins posted a .730 OPS against lefties compared to a .910 OPS against righties. Rodriguez showed an even wider split in 2025 with a .607 OPS against southpaws and a .950 OPS against righties. Both players have the talent to improve those numbers, but projecting that growth is far from certain. The organization’s best right-handed hitting prospects at the level offer a more direct solution, though they come with their own questions. Gabriel Gonzalez dominated left-handed pitching last season with a 1.022 OPS while also holding his own against righties at .869. Kaelen Culpepper, on the other hand, posted reverse splits with a .700 OPS against lefties and a .905 OPS against righties. Gonzalez stands out as a potential impact bat who could help balance the lineup, but relying on prospects to fix a longstanding major league issue is rarely a comfortable strategy. An Issue That Demands a Clear Answer The Twins have built a lineup identity around left-handed power, but the downside of that approach continues to surface in meaningful ways. Without enough right-handed hitters capable of doing damage, especially against left-handed pitching, the offense becomes easier to neutralize. This is no longer a short-term quirk. It is a multi-year roster-construction problem that has carried over across different versions of the team. Until Minnesota finds a way to add impact right-handed bats or develops internal options who can truly break the mold, opposing teams will continue to exploit this imbalance. What steps should the front office take to resolve this issue once and for all? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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- matt wallner
- trevor larnach
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Image courtesy of © Matt Krohn-Imagn Images The Minnesota Twins have seemed to have a roster flaw in recent years, with a lack of impact right-handed bats. It is not an issue that has flown under the radar, either. Season after season, the lineup has leaned heavily to the left side, often prioritizing corner outfielders with power from that side of the plate. While that approach can work in a vacuum, it has created a predictable and exploitable weakness when the Twins face quality left-handed pitching. A Multi-Year Trend That Cannot Be Ignored This is not a small-sample-size problem or an early-season overreaction. The Twins have consistently struggled against left-handed pitchers over the last several seasons, and the numbers paint a clear picture. From 2022 through 2025, Minnesota’s production against lefties has been firmly middle of the pack at best and well below average at worst when compared across the league. Among 120 individual team seasons in that span, the Twins ranked near the bottom more often than not. The 2022 club posted a .701 OPS, ranking 77th out of 120. In 2023, there was a modest improvement to a .726 OPS, good for 53rd. The 2024 team took another small step forward with a .732 OPS, ranking 47th. However, that progress stalled in 2025 when the Twins slipped back to a .705 OPS, ranking 72nd. Now in 2026, the issue has become even more pronounced. Entering play on Thursday, Minnesota owns a .636 OPS against left-handed pitching, ranking 18th overall. That total has been greatly helped by positive performances this week against left-handed starters like Tarik Skubal and Framber Valdez. However, that number reinforces a pattern that has lingered far too long for a team on the fringes of contention in the AL Central. A Roster Built to Be Platooned The current roster construction only amplifies the concern. Minnesota is overloaded with left-handed hitters who are often best utilized in platoon roles rather than everyday options against all pitching. Players like Kody Clemens, Tristan Gray, Trevor Larnach, James Outman, and Matt Wallner all hit from the left side. Each brings something valuable, whether it is power or on-base ability, but asking that group collectively to handle tough left-handed starters is a difficult proposition. Internally, there is hope that right-handed hitters like Royce Lewis and Luke Keaschall can provide balance and thump in those matchups. Lewis has shown flashes of being a middle-of-the-order force when healthy, but posted a .689 OPS against lefties last season. Keaschall is an intriguing young bat with a career .547 OPS when facing southpaws. Still, counting on them to fully stabilize the lineup against lefties feels optimistic given health questions and limited track records. More importantly, the roster simply lacks enough right-handed depth to build a lineup tailored to attack a high-end southpaw. When a dominant left-handed starter takes the mound, Minnesota often has no choice but to run out a lineup that leans into its biggest weakness. Help Is Coming, But Not the Right Kind At first glance, help appears to be on the way. Four of the organization’s top five position player prospects opened the season at Triple-A, putting them one step away from the big leagues. However, their profiles do not necessarily solve this specific issue. Walker Jenkins and Emmanuel Rodriguez are both left-handed hitters with significant upside. The Twins can reasonably hope that each develops into a hitter capable of holding his own against left-handed pitching, avoiding strict platoon roles. That would mirror the paths taken by Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau, who became complete hitters despite batting left-handed. There are encouraging signs, but there are also clear gaps. Last season, Jenkins posted a .730 OPS against lefties compared to a .910 OPS against righties. Rodriguez showed an even wider split in 2025 with a .607 OPS against southpaws and a .950 OPS against righties. Both players have the talent to improve those numbers, but projecting that growth is far from certain. The organization’s best right-handed hitting prospects at the level offer a more direct solution, though they come with their own questions. Gabriel Gonzalez dominated left-handed pitching last season with a 1.022 OPS while also holding his own against righties at .869. Kaelen Culpepper, on the other hand, posted reverse splits with a .700 OPS against lefties and a .905 OPS against righties. Gonzalez stands out as a potential impact bat who could help balance the lineup, but relying on prospects to fix a longstanding major league issue is rarely a comfortable strategy. An Issue That Demands a Clear Answer The Twins have built a lineup identity around left-handed power, but the downside of that approach continues to surface in meaningful ways. Without enough right-handed hitters capable of doing damage, especially against left-handed pitching, the offense becomes easier to neutralize. This is no longer a short-term quirk. It is a multi-year roster-construction problem that has carried over across different versions of the team. Until Minnesota finds a way to add impact right-handed bats or develops internal options who can truly break the mold, opposing teams will continue to exploit this imbalance. What steps should the front office take to resolve this issue once and for all? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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- matt wallner
- trevor larnach
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The calendar may still read April, but draft season is already beginning to take shape. In his latest update for The Athletic, Keith Law reshuffled the board for the 2026 MLB Draft, offering a clearer picture of how the top of the class is evolving. For the Twins, who currently sit in the third spot, that clarity comes with both opportunity and complication. At the top, UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky has long been viewed as the frontrunner to go first overall to the Chicago White Sox. That perception has not completely disappeared, but Law suggests the gap is tightening. A handful of college standouts are making compelling late pushes, giving both the White Sox and the Rays, who pick second, more to think about before Minnesota is on the clock. C Vahn Lackey, Georgia Tech One of the fastest risers in Law’s rankings is Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey. The right-handed hitter has put together a dominant offensive season, showcasing a rare blend of patience and power. He is controlling the strike zone at an elite level, drawing more walks than strikeouts while doing significant damage when he connects. Lackey has also flashed surprising athleticism, even contributing on the bases, and evaluators remain confident in his ability to remain behind the plate long term. That combination of offensive impact and defensive value has pushed him into the conversation at the very top of the draft. RHP Jackson Flora, UC Santa Barbara On the pitching side, UC Santa Barbara right-hander Jackson Flora continues to build momentum. His performance this spring has been nothing short of overpowering, backed by premium velocity that regularly reaches triple digits and comfortably sits in the upper 90s. Flora complements the fastball with a devastating changeup that earns top-of-the-scale grades, while his slider and command round out a well-balanced arsenal. His delivery adds an element of deception, making his already electric stuff even tougher for hitters to pick up. Among pitchers in this class, he stands alone as the most realistic candidate to challenge for the first overall selection. SS Tyler Bell, Kentucky Kentucky infielder Tyler Bell presents a different type of evaluation. After suffering a shoulder injury early in the season, Bell missed time before returning to the lineup and continuing to produce at a high level. His on-base skills have been particularly impressive, driven by a disciplined approach that limits chase and forces pitchers into the zone. There will be medical questions to answer, and teams will need to be comfortable with the long-term outlook, but his performance has kept him firmly in the mix as one of the better bats in the class. For a team like Minnesota, risk tolerance will play a key role in determining whether he remains a viable option. Beyond those names, Law’s rankings continue to highlight the depth of the class. High school shortstop Grady Emerson represents one of the top prep talents available, while college hitters Eric Becker and Drew Burress have both put themselves on the radar with strong offensive showings. Each brings a different profile, giving teams multiple pathways depending on their preferences for risk, development timeline, and positional value. For the Twins, the takeaway is simple but significant. There may not be a clear-cut choice waiting at three, but there should be a talented one. How the board unfolds ahead of them will dictate whether they lean toward a polished college bat, a high upside arm, or a longer-term prep investment. View full rumor
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- roch cholowsky
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The calendar may still read April, but draft season is already beginning to take shape. In his latest update for The Athletic, Keith Law reshuffled the board for the 2026 MLB Draft, offering a clearer picture of how the top of the class is evolving. For the Twins, who currently sit in the third spot, that clarity comes with both opportunity and complication. At the top, UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky has long been viewed as the frontrunner to go first overall to the Chicago White Sox. That perception has not completely disappeared, but Law suggests the gap is tightening. A handful of college standouts are making compelling late pushes, giving both the White Sox and the Rays, who pick second, more to think about before Minnesota is on the clock. C Vahn Lackey, Georgia Tech One of the fastest risers in Law’s rankings is Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey. The right-handed hitter has put together a dominant offensive season, showcasing a rare blend of patience and power. He is controlling the strike zone at an elite level, drawing more walks than strikeouts while doing significant damage when he connects. Lackey has also flashed surprising athleticism, even contributing on the bases, and evaluators remain confident in his ability to remain behind the plate long term. That combination of offensive impact and defensive value has pushed him into the conversation at the very top of the draft. RHP Jackson Flora, UC Santa Barbara On the pitching side, UC Santa Barbara right-hander Jackson Flora continues to build momentum. His performance this spring has been nothing short of overpowering, backed by premium velocity that regularly reaches triple digits and comfortably sits in the upper 90s. Flora complements the fastball with a devastating changeup that earns top-of-the-scale grades, while his slider and command round out a well-balanced arsenal. His delivery adds an element of deception, making his already electric stuff even tougher for hitters to pick up. Among pitchers in this class, he stands alone as the most realistic candidate to challenge for the first overall selection. SS Tyler Bell, Kentucky Kentucky infielder Tyler Bell presents a different type of evaluation. After suffering a shoulder injury early in the season, Bell missed time before returning to the lineup and continuing to produce at a high level. His on-base skills have been particularly impressive, driven by a disciplined approach that limits chase and forces pitchers into the zone. There will be medical questions to answer, and teams will need to be comfortable with the long-term outlook, but his performance has kept him firmly in the mix as one of the better bats in the class. For a team like Minnesota, risk tolerance will play a key role in determining whether he remains a viable option. Beyond those names, Law’s rankings continue to highlight the depth of the class. High school shortstop Grady Emerson represents one of the top prep talents available, while college hitters Eric Becker and Drew Burress have both put themselves on the radar with strong offensive showings. Each brings a different profile, giving teams multiple pathways depending on their preferences for risk, development timeline, and positional value. For the Twins, the takeaway is simple but significant. There may not be a clear-cut choice waiting at three, but there should be a talented one. How the board unfolds ahead of them will dictate whether they lean toward a polished college bat, a high upside arm, or a longer-term prep investment.
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Image courtesy of Brady Boehm, Toledo Mudhens There was a time when prospects were developed with a singular defensive home in mind. Shortstops stayed at shortstop. Center fielders stayed in center. First basemen were, well, first basemen. That version of baseball is fading quickly. In today’s game, defensive flexibility isn't just a bonus; it's a requirement. Teams want to platoon hitters, maximize matchups, and deploy the best possible lineup on any given night. That becomes significantly easier when a player can move around the diamond without creating a defensive liability. A right-handed batter who can handle both infield corners or an outfielder capable of sliding between all three spots gives a manager options that simply did not exist a decade ago. That reality is even more pronounced at the highest levels of the minor leagues. Triple-A is no longer just a finishing school. It's a proving ground for adaptability. The Minnesota Twins have built one of baseball’s most talented Triple-A rosters, loaded with position player prospects who are knocking on the door. The challenge is not whether they are talented enough. It's figuring out how they fit. Opportunities at the big-league level are unpredictable. A player could get hurt. A veteran could slump. A role could open overnight. For prospects, the more positions they can handle, the more doors they can walk through. Here's how Minnesota’s top position-player prospects at Triple-A are embracing that philosophy in 2026. Gabriel Gonzalez, OF Current TD Rank: 7 Gonzalez is perhaps the most interesting case study. Known primarily as a bat-first corner outfielder, he recently logged an entire game at first base for the first time in his professional career. He’s also listed at 5-foot-10, which can be small for first base. However, the Twins have used smaller players at that position in recent years, including Luis Arraez and Donovan Solano. He has also continued to see time in both corner outfield spots, giving the organization multiple ways to deploy him. Path to Debut: Minnesota’s first base defense has been a problem out of the gate. If Gonzalez can prove to be even adequate at the position, it could create a direct path to the majors that did not exist a few months ago. Kaelen Culpepper, SS Current TD Rank: 2 Culpepper has remained anchored at shortstop for most of his playing time, but the Twins are clearly testing his range. He's already appeared at third base and second base in limited action, signaling a willingness to move him around as needed. He answered some questions last season about his ability to stick at shortstop with improved range and athleticism. Still, some evaluators believe the hot corner will be his long-term defensive home. Path to Debut: Brooks Lee’s early struggles have at least opened the conversation about shortstop depth. Culpepper could force his way into that discussion, but his ability to cover multiple infield spots makes him a viable solution for more than one potential roster gap. Emmanuel Rodriguez, OF Current TD Rank: 3 Rodriguez might be the most advanced in terms of defensive flexibility. With both Walker Jenkins and Gonzalez sharing outfield reps, Rodriguez has taken on all three outfield positions. That's not just a developmental checkbox. It's a strategic advantage. Minnesota has other left-handed options that are likely ahead of him on the depth chart, including Alan Roden. However, Rodriguez needs to stay healthy and perform no matter what position he plays. Path to Debut: Having already spent parts of the last two seasons at Triple-A, Rodriguez may be next in line among the outfielders on this list. His ability to play anywhere on the grass makes him an easy plug-and-play option when the inevitable injury or roster shuffle occurs. Walker Jenkins, OF Current TD Rank: 1 Jenkins remains the organization’s top prospect, and even his development is being shaped by versatility. He has opened the season in center field, but plans were already in motion to get him exposure in a corner outfield spot. A minor wrinkle changed that plan when Rodriguez was scratched from the lineup, pushing Jenkins back to center for the night. The takeaway is not the box score, though. It's the intent. Path to Debut: The Twins have been aggressive with Jenkins, but they're also mindful of his limited professional reps due to past injuries. He may be slightly behind the other outfielders in terms of immediate opportunity, but his long-term outlook remains unchanged. Adding defensive flexibility will only strengthen his case when the time comes. For the Twins, this is not accidental. It is an organizational philosophy. The modern roster is fluid, and the teams that thrive are the ones that can adjust on the fly. By the time these players reach Minnesota, they must prove they can hit big-league pitching and move wherever the lineup needs them. That is the shape of opportunity in 2026. It's not defined by a single position on a depth chart. It is defined by how many ways a player can make himself useful. For this group at Triple-A, the path to the majors may not be straight, but it's getting wider with every new position they learn to play. Who will be the first to make their debut? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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- walker jenkins
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There was a time when prospects were developed with a singular defensive home in mind. Shortstops stayed at shortstop. Center fielders stayed in center. First basemen were, well, first basemen. That version of baseball is fading quickly. In today’s game, defensive flexibility isn't just a bonus; it's a requirement. Teams want to platoon hitters, maximize matchups, and deploy the best possible lineup on any given night. That becomes significantly easier when a player can move around the diamond without creating a defensive liability. A right-handed batter who can handle both infield corners or an outfielder capable of sliding between all three spots gives a manager options that simply did not exist a decade ago. That reality is even more pronounced at the highest levels of the minor leagues. Triple-A is no longer just a finishing school. It's a proving ground for adaptability. The Minnesota Twins have built one of baseball’s most talented Triple-A rosters, loaded with position player prospects who are knocking on the door. The challenge is not whether they are talented enough. It's figuring out how they fit. Opportunities at the big-league level are unpredictable. A player could get hurt. A veteran could slump. A role could open overnight. For prospects, the more positions they can handle, the more doors they can walk through. Here's how Minnesota’s top position-player prospects at Triple-A are embracing that philosophy in 2026. Gabriel Gonzalez, OF Current TD Rank: 7 Gonzalez is perhaps the most interesting case study. Known primarily as a bat-first corner outfielder, he recently logged an entire game at first base for the first time in his professional career. He’s also listed at 5-foot-10, which can be small for first base. However, the Twins have used smaller players at that position in recent years, including Luis Arraez and Donovan Solano. He has also continued to see time in both corner outfield spots, giving the organization multiple ways to deploy him. Path to Debut: Minnesota’s first base defense has been a problem out of the gate. If Gonzalez can prove to be even adequate at the position, it could create a direct path to the majors that did not exist a few months ago. Kaelen Culpepper, SS Current TD Rank: 2 Culpepper has remained anchored at shortstop for most of his playing time, but the Twins are clearly testing his range. He's already appeared at third base and second base in limited action, signaling a willingness to move him around as needed. He answered some questions last season about his ability to stick at shortstop with improved range and athleticism. Still, some evaluators believe the hot corner will be his long-term defensive home. Path to Debut: Brooks Lee’s early struggles have at least opened the conversation about shortstop depth. Culpepper could force his way into that discussion, but his ability to cover multiple infield spots makes him a viable solution for more than one potential roster gap. Emmanuel Rodriguez, OF Current TD Rank: 3 Rodriguez might be the most advanced in terms of defensive flexibility. With both Walker Jenkins and Gonzalez sharing outfield reps, Rodriguez has taken on all three outfield positions. That's not just a developmental checkbox. It's a strategic advantage. Minnesota has other left-handed options that are likely ahead of him on the depth chart, including Alan Roden. However, Rodriguez needs to stay healthy and perform no matter what position he plays. Path to Debut: Having already spent parts of the last two seasons at Triple-A, Rodriguez may be next in line among the outfielders on this list. His ability to play anywhere on the grass makes him an easy plug-and-play option when the inevitable injury or roster shuffle occurs. Walker Jenkins, OF Current TD Rank: 1 Jenkins remains the organization’s top prospect, and even his development is being shaped by versatility. He has opened the season in center field, but plans were already in motion to get him exposure in a corner outfield spot. A minor wrinkle changed that plan when Rodriguez was scratched from the lineup, pushing Jenkins back to center for the night. The takeaway is not the box score, though. It's the intent. Path to Debut: The Twins have been aggressive with Jenkins, but they're also mindful of his limited professional reps due to past injuries. He may be slightly behind the other outfielders in terms of immediate opportunity, but his long-term outlook remains unchanged. Adding defensive flexibility will only strengthen his case when the time comes. For the Twins, this is not accidental. It is an organizational philosophy. The modern roster is fluid, and the teams that thrive are the ones that can adjust on the fly. By the time these players reach Minnesota, they must prove they can hit big-league pitching and move wherever the lineup needs them. That is the shape of opportunity in 2026. It's not defined by a single position on a depth chart. It is defined by how many ways a player can make himself useful. For this group at Triple-A, the path to the majors may not be straight, but it's getting wider with every new position they learn to play. Who will be the first to make their debut? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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Image courtesy of © Michael McLoone-Imagn Images Over the past few weeks, the conversation around the Minnesota Twins has drifted toward the future and who might be locked into it. Names like Walker Jenkins continue to surface, despite the fact that he has yet to make his big-league debut. Other teams around the league are locking up players of a similar caliber, and it’s fun to dream about the future. Twins ownership also seems to be open to extensions with other young players. During a recent media session, Tom Pohlad pointed to a trio of intriguing talents in Luke Keaschall, Taj Bradley, and Mick Abel as players the organization could consider approaching about long-term deals. On paper, those are the types of players teams try to secure early: young, controllable, and brimming with upside. It is a strategy that has worked across the league, buying out arbitration years and (sometimes) a slice of free agency at a discounted rate. But it's also a strategy that can backfire. As easy as it is to identify the next extension candidate, it's just as important to remember the players who once looked like obvious choices themselves. In recent seasons, the Twins have had multiple opportunities to make those bets and, whether by design or circumstance, they may have avoided some costly mistakes. Royce Lewis Stock High Point: 2023 Season Few players have embodied both the promise and volatility of a top prospect like Royce Lewis. As the first overall pick in the 2017 MLB Draft, he represented the future of the franchise from the moment his name was called. That future appeared to arrive in full during the 2023 season. Lewis was electric, posting a 149 OPS+ across 58 games while providing a spark the Twins desperately needed. His impact extended into October, where he delivered two massive home runs against the Toronto Blue Jays, helping secure the franchise’s first playoff series victory in two decades. In that moment, an extension would have felt not only reasonable, but necessary. Since then, the picture has shifted. Lewis has struggled to recapture that level of production, posting a 95 OPS+ while continuing to search for consistency defensively at third base. Injuries have remained part of the equation, and the once-clear trajectory toward superstardom now feels far less certain. With two years of team control remaining, the Twins still have flexibility—something that would not be the case had they acted at his peak. Jose Miranda Stock High Point: 2022 Season The rise of Jose Miranda felt like one of the more stable bets in recent Twins history. After a dominant 2021 minor league campaign that included a .973 OPS and 30 home runs across Double- and Triple-A, Miranda carried that success into his rookie season. In 2022, he posted a 114 OPS+ with 15 homers and 25 doubles over 125 games, showcasing elite bat-to-ball skills that suggested a long runway as a productive big league hitter. This was exactly the type of profile teams often look to extend early, prioritizing contact ability and offensive consistency. Instead, his trajectory became anything but steady. A 55 OPS+ in 2023 was followed by a rebound to 112 OPS+ in 2024, but the inconsistency ultimately defined his tenure. By 2025, he was out of the organization entirely. Now in the San Diego system, Miranda is trying to regain his footing at Triple-A, far removed from the player who once looked like a lineup fixture for years to come. Brooks Lee Stock High Point: 2024 Season The Brooks Lee case might be the most instructive for pre-debut or early-career extensions. Like Jenkins today, Lee entered his first full professional season with significant hype. The eighth overall pick in 2022, he was widely viewed as one of the safest hitters in his draft class. By 2023, he had posted an .808 OPS in the upper minors and climbed to No. 18 on MLB Pipeline’s top 100 list. It would have been easy to envision a deal that bought out his arbitration years while giving the Twins option control over his early free-agency seasons. That version of Lee has yet to appear consistently in the majors. Through his first 197 games, he owns a 74 OPS+ and has struggled to provide value defensively. At 25 years old, there is still time for adjustments, but the gap between expectation and production has been significant. An early extension here could have quickly become an anchor. The Value of Patience Extensions can sound great when viewed through the rose-colored glasses of a player’s best moments at the big-league level. The temptation is to lock in that version of the player before the price climbs any higher. But baseball has a way of humbling even the most promising trajectories. Opponents adjust. Weaknesses are exposed. Performance ebbs and flows in ways that are often impossible to predict. By holding back on extensions for players like Lewis, Miranda, and Lee at their respective peaks, the Twins may have preserved both payroll flexibility and roster optionality. That does not mean the strategy should be to avoid extensions altogether. It simply underscores the importance of timing and conviction. Betting on talent is part of the game, but so is recognizing when uncertainty outweighs the perceived discount. In a league where one contract can shape a roster for years, sometimes the smartest move is the one not made. What other players would have been extension candidates early in their careers? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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Over the past few weeks, the conversation around the Minnesota Twins has drifted toward the future and who might be locked into it. Names like Walker Jenkins continue to surface, despite the fact that he has yet to make his big-league debut. Other teams around the league are locking up players of a similar caliber, and it’s fun to dream about the future. Twins ownership also seems to be open to extensions with other young players. During a recent media session, Tom Pohlad pointed to a trio of intriguing talents in Luke Keaschall, Taj Bradley, and Mick Abel as players the organization could consider approaching about long-term deals. On paper, those are the types of players teams try to secure early: young, controllable, and brimming with upside. It is a strategy that has worked across the league, buying out arbitration years and (sometimes) a slice of free agency at a discounted rate. But it's also a strategy that can backfire. As easy as it is to identify the next extension candidate, it's just as important to remember the players who once looked like obvious choices themselves. In recent seasons, the Twins have had multiple opportunities to make those bets and, whether by design or circumstance, they may have avoided some costly mistakes. Royce Lewis Stock High Point: 2023 Season Few players have embodied both the promise and volatility of a top prospect like Royce Lewis. As the first overall pick in the 2017 MLB Draft, he represented the future of the franchise from the moment his name was called. That future appeared to arrive in full during the 2023 season. Lewis was electric, posting a 149 OPS+ across 58 games while providing a spark the Twins desperately needed. His impact extended into October, where he delivered two massive home runs against the Toronto Blue Jays, helping secure the franchise’s first playoff series victory in two decades. In that moment, an extension would have felt not only reasonable, but necessary. Since then, the picture has shifted. Lewis has struggled to recapture that level of production, posting a 95 OPS+ while continuing to search for consistency defensively at third base. Injuries have remained part of the equation, and the once-clear trajectory toward superstardom now feels far less certain. With two years of team control remaining, the Twins still have flexibility—something that would not be the case had they acted at his peak. Jose Miranda Stock High Point: 2022 Season The rise of Jose Miranda felt like one of the more stable bets in recent Twins history. After a dominant 2021 minor league campaign that included a .973 OPS and 30 home runs across Double- and Triple-A, Miranda carried that success into his rookie season. In 2022, he posted a 114 OPS+ with 15 homers and 25 doubles over 125 games, showcasing elite bat-to-ball skills that suggested a long runway as a productive big league hitter. This was exactly the type of profile teams often look to extend early, prioritizing contact ability and offensive consistency. Instead, his trajectory became anything but steady. A 55 OPS+ in 2023 was followed by a rebound to 112 OPS+ in 2024, but the inconsistency ultimately defined his tenure. By 2025, he was out of the organization entirely. Now in the San Diego system, Miranda is trying to regain his footing at Triple-A, far removed from the player who once looked like a lineup fixture for years to come. Brooks Lee Stock High Point: 2024 Season The Brooks Lee case might be the most instructive for pre-debut or early-career extensions. Like Jenkins today, Lee entered his first full professional season with significant hype. The eighth overall pick in 2022, he was widely viewed as one of the safest hitters in his draft class. By 2023, he had posted an .808 OPS in the upper minors and climbed to No. 18 on MLB Pipeline’s top 100 list. It would have been easy to envision a deal that bought out his arbitration years while giving the Twins option control over his early free-agency seasons. That version of Lee has yet to appear consistently in the majors. Through his first 197 games, he owns a 74 OPS+ and has struggled to provide value defensively. At 25 years old, there is still time for adjustments, but the gap between expectation and production has been significant. An early extension here could have quickly become an anchor. The Value of Patience Extensions can sound great when viewed through the rose-colored glasses of a player’s best moments at the big-league level. The temptation is to lock in that version of the player before the price climbs any higher. But baseball has a way of humbling even the most promising trajectories. Opponents adjust. Weaknesses are exposed. Performance ebbs and flows in ways that are often impossible to predict. By holding back on extensions for players like Lewis, Miranda, and Lee at their respective peaks, the Twins may have preserved both payroll flexibility and roster optionality. That does not mean the strategy should be to avoid extensions altogether. It simply underscores the importance of timing and conviction. Betting on talent is part of the game, but so is recognizing when uncertainty outweighs the perceived discount. In a league where one contract can shape a roster for years, sometimes the smartest move is the one not made. What other players would have been extension candidates early in their careers? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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Image courtesy of © Jordan Johnson-Imagn Images There was a time when being a Minnesota Twins fan meant circling Opening Day on the calendar and talking yourself into the idea that this year would be different. That time still exists, technically, but it now lasts roughly three games, before the emotional damage begins. After another sluggish start to the season, the organization has unveiled a bold new initiative aimed at easing the burden on its most dedicated supporters. In a press conference that felt equal parts innovation and resignation, the Twins announced that fans are now officially allowed to enter the transfer portal. “This is about empowering our fan base,” said a team spokesperson, while carefully avoiding eye contact. “We recognize that watching this product on the field requires a level of emotional endurance that may not be sustainable for everyone. The portal gives fans options. It gives them hope. It gives them a chance to feel joy again, even if it's temporary and comes with a different logo.” The announcement has sparked an immediate reaction from the fan base, many of whom were already mentally exploring their options before the press release hit social media. “I entered the portal after the third error on Tuesday,” said longtime fan Mark D., who claims to have watched nearly every game since 2004. “I just put my name in, uploaded a highlight reel of me clapping politely during pitching changes, and waited for the calls. I'm not saying I'm gone for good, but I need to see what's out there. I deserve to feel something other than confusion.” Another fan, Jessica R., said she's looking for a better cultural fit. “I am tired of explaining to my friends why I still believe,” she said. “I want a team where hope lasts into May. Maybe even June. Is that too much to ask? I just want meaningful baseball, and a bullpen that doesn't feel like a group project where nobody did their part.” Around the league, several teams have already begun recruiting disillusioned Twins fans, pitching them on a fresh start and a more stable emotional environment. The Milwaukee Brewers have positioned themselves as a logical landing spot, offering geographic familiarity with a slightly less chaotic baseball experience. “We understand Midwest values,” a Brewers representative said. “We offer competitive baseball, a strong pitching foundation, and the ability to watch games without immediately questioning your life choices. Plus, we have a slide in the outfield. That has to count for something.” The Chicago Cubs are leaning into their big-market appeal and their history of breaking curses. “We can promise a historic ballpark, a vibrant fan culture, and just enough success to keep you invested,” a Cubs official noted. “Also, we've already done the whole long-suffering thing and came out the other side. We're basically a support group with ivy.” Perhaps the most surprising entrant into the mix is the Colorado Rockies, who are reportedly targeting Twins fans who simply want a different kind of chaos. “Look, we're not saying we're better,” a Rockies spokesperson admitted. “But we are different. Our games have altitude, offense, and absolutely no expectations. You can relax here. Losses feel lighter when the score is 12 to 9, and nobody knows what just happened. Also, we're gonna land @Greggory Masterson. Follow Gregg here, instead of following him on Twitter.” Back in Minnesota, the front office insists that the transfer portal is not a sign of giving up on the season, but rather an acknowledgment of reality. “We still believe in this team,” another executive said. “We just also believe in honesty. If fans need to step away and explore other opportunities, we support that. And if they come back when things turn around, we will welcome them with open arms and a slightly improved platoon splits.” For now, the portal remains open, and fans continue to weigh their options. Some will leave in search of greener pastures. Others will stay, clinging to the familiar cycle of optimism and disappointment that has defined the experience for years—because, for all the talk of transfers and fresh starts, being a Twins fan is not just a choice. It's a condition that cannot be easily cured, even when a perfectly good exit door is finally provided. Deep down, most fans know the truth. No matter how many offers come in or how appealing another team might look, there's a strong chance they will withdraw their name from the portal just in time for the next winning streak that changes everything. View full article
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There was a time when being a Minnesota Twins fan meant circling Opening Day on the calendar and talking yourself into the idea that this year would be different. That time still exists, technically, but it now lasts roughly three games, before the emotional damage begins. After another sluggish start to the season, the organization has unveiled a bold new initiative aimed at easing the burden on its most dedicated supporters. In a press conference that felt equal parts innovation and resignation, the Twins announced that fans are now officially allowed to enter the transfer portal. “This is about empowering our fan base,” said a team spokesperson, while carefully avoiding eye contact. “We recognize that watching this product on the field requires a level of emotional endurance that may not be sustainable for everyone. The portal gives fans options. It gives them hope. It gives them a chance to feel joy again, even if it's temporary and comes with a different logo.” The announcement has sparked an immediate reaction from the fan base, many of whom were already mentally exploring their options before the press release hit social media. “I entered the portal after the third error on Tuesday,” said longtime fan Mark D., who claims to have watched nearly every game since 2004. “I just put my name in, uploaded a highlight reel of me clapping politely during pitching changes, and waited for the calls. I'm not saying I'm gone for good, but I need to see what's out there. I deserve to feel something other than confusion.” Another fan, Jessica R., said she's looking for a better cultural fit. “I am tired of explaining to my friends why I still believe,” she said. “I want a team where hope lasts into May. Maybe even June. Is that too much to ask? I just want meaningful baseball, and a bullpen that doesn't feel like a group project where nobody did their part.” Around the league, several teams have already begun recruiting disillusioned Twins fans, pitching them on a fresh start and a more stable emotional environment. The Milwaukee Brewers have positioned themselves as a logical landing spot, offering geographic familiarity with a slightly less chaotic baseball experience. “We understand Midwest values,” a Brewers representative said. “We offer competitive baseball, a strong pitching foundation, and the ability to watch games without immediately questioning your life choices. Plus, we have a slide in the outfield. That has to count for something.” The Chicago Cubs are leaning into their big-market appeal and their history of breaking curses. “We can promise a historic ballpark, a vibrant fan culture, and just enough success to keep you invested,” a Cubs official noted. “Also, we've already done the whole long-suffering thing and came out the other side. We're basically a support group with ivy.” Perhaps the most surprising entrant into the mix is the Colorado Rockies, who are reportedly targeting Twins fans who simply want a different kind of chaos. “Look, we're not saying we're better,” a Rockies spokesperson admitted. “But we are different. Our games have altitude, offense, and absolutely no expectations. You can relax here. Losses feel lighter when the score is 12 to 9, and nobody knows what just happened. Also, we're gonna land @Greggory Masterson. Follow Gregg here, instead of following him on Twitter.” Back in Minnesota, the front office insists that the transfer portal is not a sign of giving up on the season, but rather an acknowledgment of reality. “We still believe in this team,” another executive said. “We just also believe in honesty. If fans need to step away and explore other opportunities, we support that. And if they come back when things turn around, we will welcome them with open arms and a slightly improved platoon splits.” For now, the portal remains open, and fans continue to weigh their options. Some will leave in search of greener pastures. Others will stay, clinging to the familiar cycle of optimism and disappointment that has defined the experience for years—because, for all the talk of transfers and fresh starts, being a Twins fan is not just a choice. It's a condition that cannot be easily cured, even when a perfectly good exit door is finally provided. Deep down, most fans know the truth. No matter how many offers come in or how appealing another team might look, there's a strong chance they will withdraw their name from the portal just in time for the next winning streak that changes everything.
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Image courtesy of © Jordan Johnson-Imagn Images There are certain matchups in baseball that begin to feel inevitable. A pitcher seems to have a hitter’s number, the results stack up, and eventually every new plate appearance feels like a rerun. For Ryan Jeffers, that reality had long existed against Tarik Skubal. Entering Tuesday night, Jeffers had stepped in against Skubal more than any other pitcher in his career. The results were lopsided, to the point of being almost unbelievable. In 25 plate appearances, Jeffers had just one hit. Yes, it left the yard, but the rest of the line told the story. Nine strikeouts. Two walks. A .043 batting average and a .294 OPS. It was dominance, plain and simple. That lone bright moment came all the way back on July 8, 2021. Skubal was still developing, Jeffers was in his sophomore season, and Minnesota scratched out five runs in a 5-3 win. Since then, nothing. Four seasons of empty at-bats against one of the best left-handed arms in the game. So when Jeffers walked to the plate Tuesday night, the context mattered. The Twins were clinging to a one-run lead. Austin Martin and Byron Buxton worked disciplined at-bats to draw walks after Skubal had yet to walk a batter all season. Luke Keaschall smacked a single to open the scoring but the Twins were going to need more. First and second with one out. No room for error. The type of moment that can swing a game, and maybe exorcise a few demons along the way. Anatomy of an At-Bat Skubal opened with what has worked so often before. A slider darting across the zone. Swing and miss. Then a 96 mile per hour fastball painted at the top of the zone for a called strike. Just like that, 0 and 2. It looked familiar. Too familiar. But this time, the at-bat did not end there. Skubal went back to the fastball, nearly identical in location, this one at 96.4. Jeffers stayed alive, fouling it away. Another heater followed, this time a 96.8 sinker at the top of the zone. Again, Jeffers got a piece. The count still sat at 1 and 2, but the tone had shifted. Instead of overmatched, Jeffers looked stubborn. That distinction matters against pitchers like Skubal. Survival is the first step. Then came the pitch that had ended so many of these battles before. A slider on the edge of the zone, tempting, sharp, designed to finish. In years past, that is likely a swing and miss. Another strikeout. Another walk back to the dugout. Instead, Jeffers stayed through it. The swing was controlled, direct, and decisive. He drove the ball down the right field line, a 90.3 mile per hour rocket that split the defense. Both runners came around to score. Just like that, the narrative flipped. The two-run double did more than pad the lead. It shifted the game’s probability by 14.9%, pushing Minnesota to an 89.3% chance of victory. In a single swing, Jeffers turned years of frustration into one of the most impactful moments of the night. For hitters, success is often less about dramatic changes and more about subtle adjustments. A fraction longer on the fastball. A better recognition of spin. The willingness to fight off pitches instead of succumbing to them. Jeffers showed all of that in one at-bat. Maybe it was just one swing. Maybe it was just one night. But for a hitter who had spent years searching for answers against the same opponent, it felt like something more. Jeffers did not just get a hit off Skubal. He changed the script. And sometimes, that is all it takes to finally leave the past behind. What stood out about that at-bat? Did Jeffers finally solve Skubal? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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Anatomy of an At-Bat: Ryan Jeffers Finally Conquers Tarik Skubal
Cody Christie posted an article in Twins
There are certain matchups in baseball that begin to feel inevitable. A pitcher seems to have a hitter’s number, the results stack up, and eventually every new plate appearance feels like a rerun. For Ryan Jeffers, that reality had long existed against Tarik Skubal. Entering Tuesday night, Jeffers had stepped in against Skubal more than any other pitcher in his career. The results were lopsided, to the point of being almost unbelievable. In 25 plate appearances, Jeffers had just one hit. Yes, it left the yard, but the rest of the line told the story. Nine strikeouts. Two walks. A .043 batting average and a .294 OPS. It was dominance, plain and simple. That lone bright moment came all the way back on July 8, 2021. Skubal was still developing, Jeffers was in his sophomore season, and Minnesota scratched out five runs in a 5-3 win. Since then, nothing. Four seasons of empty at-bats against one of the best left-handed arms in the game. So when Jeffers walked to the plate Tuesday night, the context mattered. The Twins were clinging to a one-run lead. Austin Martin and Byron Buxton worked disciplined at-bats to draw walks after Skubal had yet to walk a batter all season. Luke Keaschall smacked a single to open the scoring but the Twins were going to need more. First and second with one out. No room for error. The type of moment that can swing a game, and maybe exorcise a few demons along the way. Anatomy of an At-Bat Skubal opened with what has worked so often before. A slider darting across the zone. Swing and miss. Then a 96 mile per hour fastball painted at the top of the zone for a called strike. Just like that, 0 and 2. It looked familiar. Too familiar. But this time, the at-bat did not end there. Skubal went back to the fastball, nearly identical in location, this one at 96.4. Jeffers stayed alive, fouling it away. Another heater followed, this time a 96.8 sinker at the top of the zone. Again, Jeffers got a piece. The count still sat at 1 and 2, but the tone had shifted. Instead of overmatched, Jeffers looked stubborn. That distinction matters against pitchers like Skubal. Survival is the first step. Then came the pitch that had ended so many of these battles before. A slider on the edge of the zone, tempting, sharp, designed to finish. In years past, that is likely a swing and miss. Another strikeout. Another walk back to the dugout. Instead, Jeffers stayed through it. The swing was controlled, direct, and decisive. He drove the ball down the right field line, a 90.3 mile per hour rocket that split the defense. Both runners came around to score. Just like that, the narrative flipped. The two-run double did more than pad the lead. It shifted the game’s probability by 14.9%, pushing Minnesota to an 89.3% chance of victory. In a single swing, Jeffers turned years of frustration into one of the most impactful moments of the night. For hitters, success is often less about dramatic changes and more about subtle adjustments. A fraction longer on the fastball. A better recognition of spin. The willingness to fight off pitches instead of succumbing to them. Jeffers showed all of that in one at-bat. Maybe it was just one swing. Maybe it was just one night. But for a hitter who had spent years searching for answers against the same opponent, it felt like something more. Jeffers did not just get a hit off Skubal. He changed the script. And sometimes, that is all it takes to finally leave the past behind. What stood out about that at-bat? Did Jeffers finally solve Skubal? Leave a comment and start the discussion.

